Human portraits filtered through the dreamscape are what Chilean artist Jon Jacobsen explores in a series of cinemagraphs called The Present.

These haunting, distorted images feature a subject who, like the dreaming woman in Fuseli's The Nightmare, is surrounded by his own unconscious leaking out in to the real world as the two combine into one freaky, phantasmagorical whole. The figure in Jacobsen's GIFs takes up a pose that's caught between torment and trance, as the elastic imagery ripples into life around him, twisting the bodies further or complementing the fantastical goings-on taking place already. It's a mix of the visionary with the everyday, as still life objects rest in the shot—some innocuous like a bunch of flowers, others slightly more sinister. On his Behance page Jacobsen gives a short explanation for the series: "Animated images inspired in the present and how we feel it with our senses.
" It's the kind of present you might feel hanging after the third day at a festival.
Klebebande Berlin - Tape Art aus Berlin. Inspired by the classics. Crafted for a new breed of gentleman. - Beckett Simonon - Beckett Simonon.

Some of us have just got to have a pool, while others want clever modern design, sustainability, or integration with natural elements. No matter what it is that makes your dream home unique, here are a few examples of homes where people have been able to realize some of their greatest home design fantasies. [Read more...] These ingenious home improvements run from pools and aquariums to cleverly-hidden storage spaces, multi-purpose furniture and… cat transit walkways. Maybe you’ll recognize something that you’ve always wanted to see, or maybe the pictures will get your juices flowing and inspire you to come up with or even build something new. Warning – viewing some of these images may make you feel dissatisfied with your current home!

Concurso de Windoodles. Santigold - Master of My Make-Believe Full Album Stream. V2 - "Little Miss" - 2012. Color Trends + Palettes. Björk: full biophilia app suite. Artist Publishes His Life Online Via A Custom iPhone App (And 3 Other Projects That Tackle Living In Public)
In our digital information age where social media and pocket devices are king, our private lives are no longer so private.

By now this is public knowledge, much like your tweets, and it’s become such a universal truth it’s practically a cliche to say it. Whether it’s a model tweeting about a married actor hitting on her or you tweeting about that band/sandwich/art show you went to see/eat/experience, the private/public divide that was once so tangible has now become less so. At a time when governments are snooping on citizens, when our devices track our every move via satellite, when Google monitors your web activity, and on one side of the spectrum we witness the evasion of privacy laws in the name of protection and national security, while on the other we willingly “check-in” on Foursquare or post images to Instagram to notify the world of our activities and locations, the whole privacy/public debate becomes ever more pertinent.